Leó Szilárd - Key Participants - Linus Pauling and the International Peace Movement
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Louis Budenz Barry Commoner Edward Condon Norman Cousins Lee DuBridge Albert Einstein Stephen Fritchman Gunnar Jahn Willard Libby Robert Oppenheimer Ava Helen Pauling Linus Pauling Bertrand Russell Albert Schweitzer Albert Szent-Györgyi Leó Szilárd Edward Teller Dalton Trumbo Harold Urey Henry A. Wallace Sidney Weinbaum View all Key Participants |
1898-1964
Leo Szilard Papers, 1898-1998 Pictures and IllustrationsPublished Papers and Official Documents
Manuscript Notes and Typescripts
Newspaper ClippingsQuotes"As far as I can see, I am not particularly qualified to speak about the problem of peace. I am a scientist and science, which has created the bomb and confronted the world with a problem, has no solution to offer to this problem. Yet a scientist may perhaps be permitted to speak on the problem of peace, not because he knows more about it than other people do, but rather because no one seems to know very much about it." Leo Szilard. "Calling for a Crusade," Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, (3). April 1947. "The American people will soon be faced with a crucial decision. This decision is not so much what amount of national sovereignty we are willing to give up. Undoubtedly more and more sovereignty will have to be given up as time goes on, but the main issue is not the issue of sovereignty. The main issue is whether we are willing to base our national policy on those higher loyalties which exists in the hearts and minds of the individuals who form the population of this country but which do not find as yet expression in our national policy. The main issue is whether we are willing to assume our full share of responsibility in the creation of a world community." Leo Szilard. "Calling for a Crusade," Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, (3). April 1947. Audio Clips |